Media Coverage

The work done by Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine faculty members (and even some students) is regularly highlighted in newspapers, online media outlets and more. Below you’ll find links to articles and videos of Feinberg in the news.

  • Chicago Tribune

    A third of black women in study of disadvantaged neighborhood have PTSD

    A recent Northwestern Medicine study that examined the South Side neighborhood of Oakland found that 29 percent of the 72 African-American study participants have the disorder and an additional 7 percent exhibited a large number of signs that are part of a PTSD diagnosis. Researchers said they believe that points to a need for more mental health services and screenings in poor neighborhoods. “People are struggling severely, and I think that sometimes the negative implications of mental illness are really underestimated,” said Inger Burnett-Zeigler, a clinical psychologist and one of the authors on the study.

  • Crain’s Chicago Business

    Lurie CEO: Race to replace Obamacare putting children at ‘grave risk’

    Patrick Magoon, CEO of the Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago

  • Huffington Post

    Australia: New Frontiers for Fertility and Young People with Cancer

    One of the areas of great importance for advocacy and research in the young adult cancer movement is Oncofertility. What we know is that cancer and its treatment (surgery, chemotherapy and radiation) can affect the ability for a person to have children. Oncofertility (oncology + fertility) is a term that was coined by Dr. Teresa K. Woodruff of Northwestern University to define this area of academic research and practice.

  • Reuters

    Prostate, hair loss drugs tied to mental health risk, but not suicide

    Tina Kiguradze and William Temps of Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago and colleagues found that when erectile dysfunction occurred in men taking 5ARIs for at least 180 days, the dysfunction was more likely to last at least 90 days after stopping the medication. Erectile dysfunction, when it occurred, resolved faster in men who took the medications for shorter periods.

  • Chicago Tribune

    A Playbook For Managing Problems In The Last Chapter Of Your Life

    Lee Lindquist, chief of geriatrics at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, wondered if people could become better prepared for such emergencies, and so she designed a research project to find out. The result is a unique website, planyourlifespan.org, which helps older adults plan for predictable problems during what Lindquist calls the “last quarter of life” — roughly, from age 75 on. “Many people plan for retirement,” the energetic physician explained in her office close to Lake Michigan. “They complete a will, assign powers of attorney, pick out a funeral home, and they think they’re done.”

  • Reuters

    Baby gear injuries surging, often due to falls

    arriers, for example, aren’t a problem when they’re used properly, said Dr. Elizabeth Powell, a pediatrics researcher at Northwestern University in Chicago who wasn’t involved in the study. “As an ED clinician, I see infants who are not properly restrained, or those who fall from carriers placed on counters, beds or other furniture,” Powell said by email. “While this detail is outside the scope of the report, this is why there are injuries associated with this product.”

  • The New York Times

    Cardiovascular Deaths Linked to Poor Dietary Choices

    The results suggest that an integrated approach to healthy eating is possible, said Linda Van Horn, a spokeswoman for the American Heart Association and a professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University, who was not involved in the study. “Typically, the higher the diet is in natural — not processed — plant-based foods, the lower the sodium intake is,” she said. “So by eating more of the favored foods, the detrimental intakes of sodium, as well as trans-fat and saturated fat and sugar, are lower.”

  • Chicago Tribune

    Rookie docs can work longer, 24-hour shifts under new rules

    Critics of the shorter limit said it short-changed rookie doctors. Dr. Karl Bilimoria, a Northwestern University surgery professor, said some residents have complained that they’ve had to leave work in the middle of surgeries. Bilimoria led a study published last year suggesting that first-year residents could work longer without endangering patient safety or their own well-being.

  • ABC News

    Rookie docs can work longer, 24-hour shifts under new rules

    Critics of the shorter limit said it short-changed rookie doctors. Dr. Karl Bilimoria, a Northwestern University surgery professor, said some residents have complained that they’ve had to leave work in the middle of surgeries. Bilimoria led a study published last year suggesting that first-year residents could work longer without endangering patient safety or their own well-being.

  • The Washington Post

    Rookie docs can work longer, 24-hour shifts under new rules

    Critics of the shorter limit said it short-changed rookie doctors. Dr. Karl Bilimoria, a Northwestern University surgery professor, said some residents have complained that they’ve had to leave work in the middle of surgeries. Bilimoria led a study published last year suggesting that first-year residents could work longer without endangering patient safety or their own well-being.